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Emerson, Lake & Palmer

 
Artist: Emerson, Lake & Palmer
 
  • Formed: 1970, Bournemouth, Dorset, England
  • Disbanded: 1978 12
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Brain Salad Surgery," "The Return of the Manticore," "Emerson, Lake & Palmer"
  • Representative Songs: "Lucky Man," "Hoedown," "Still...You Turn Me On"

Biography

Emerson, Lake & Palmer were progressive rock's first supergroup. Greeted by the rock press and the public as something akin to conquering heroes, they succeeded in broadening the audience for progressive rock from hundreds of thousands into tens of millions of listeners, creating a major radio phenomenon as well. Their flamboyance on record and in the studio echoed the best work of the heavy metal bands of the era, proving that classical rockers could compete for that arena-scale audience. Over and above their own commercial success, the trio also paved the way for the success of such bands as Yes, who would become their chief rivals for much of the 1970s.

Keyboardist Keith Emerson planted the seeds of the group in late 1969 when his band the Nice shared a bill at the Fillmore West with King Crimson, an up-and-coming band that featured lead singer and bassist Greg Lake. Emerson and Lake first discussed the possibility of collaborating at that point, but only after the Crimson lineup began disintegrating during their first U.S. tour did he finally opt to leave the group (after agreeing to sing on the forthcoming Crimson album). Upon officially teaming in 1970, Emerson and Lake auditioned several drummers, including Mitch Mitchell, before they approached Carl Palmer, a former member of the Crazy World of Arthur Brown who later hooked up with bandmate Vincent Crane in an experimental band called Atomic Rooster.

The trio's first rehearsals mostly picked up from the Nice's and King Crimson's repertoires, including such well-known numbers as "Rondo" and "21st Century Schizoid Man." In August of 1970, even as they were working on the songs that would ultimately comprise their first album, ELP played its first show at the Plymouth Guildhall, just ahead of the Isle of Wight Festival in August of 1970. The group's self-titled debut album was finished the following month and released in November; an instant success, it rose to the Top Five in England and the Top 20 in America. The single "Lucky Man" also was a hit, and their stage act rapidly became the stuff of legend.

The recording of the second ELP album, 1971's Tarkus, tested their cohesiveness while stretching their sound in new directions. Emerson was interested in further exploiting the range of the Moog synthesizer, and had conceived of an extended suite built around an opening eruption of sound, while Palmer had come up with an unusual drum pattern that he was eager to use. When they tried to present their ideas to Lake, who had assumed the mantle of producer with the first album, however, he couldn't really grasp the piece. He balked, and arguments ensued, and for a time it looked as though there might be no second album.

The group eventually agreed to disagree about the proposed track: "Tarkus" became the title of the new album, and ultimately defined the ELP sound as most people understood it -- the song was loud and bombastic, somewhat gloomy in its lyrical tone, and exultant in its instrumental power. A descendant of "The Three Fates" and "Tank" from the first album, "Tarkus" was a much denser piece of music, featuring not only multiple overdubs of instruments but textures that ultimately proved very difficult to re-create on-stage. After Tarkus hit the number one spot on the English charts and reached the Top Ten in America, their March 21, 1971, concert at Newcastle City Hall -- featuring the group's adaptation of Mussorgsky's "Pictures at an Exhibition" -- was recorded for release, and became another major hit.

It was eight months before ELP's next record, Trilogy, was released in July of 1972. In the interim, they toured extensively, and made it their business to cultivate the college audience that took most naturally to their work. With Trilogy, the partnership was back fully in balance, with each member taking an equal share of musical responsibility. Moreover, Lake never sang better, nor did the group ever sound more comfortable and laid-back; among the eight very solid numbers in a classical-rock vein, there was tucked a track that became virtually the band's signature tune, a version of Aaron Copland's Hoedown.

Such was the group's credibility that when it came time to record a version of the first movement of Alberto Ginastera's Piano Concerto No. 1 and the publisher denied them permission, they approached the composer himself, who fully approved and applauded the track that became "Tocatta" on Brain Salad Surgery, released in 1973 on their own record label, Manticore (named for one of the mythological creatures portrayed in "Tarkus"). Through Manticore, ELP also released material by Pete Sinfield and the Italian progressive rock band PFM; Sinfield's presence as a composer with Lake on Brain Salad Surgery helped strengthen one of the group's lingering weaknesses, its lyrics -- where Lake's use of language had always tended toward the pleasant but simplistic, Sinfield, a veteran of King Crimson, provided lyrical complexity nearly as daunting as the best of the group's music.

In the wake of this string of successes, ELP released a triple live album, Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends, in August of 1974, but their streak came to a halt with Works, an album that also marked the dissolution of the group sound. At the time, each member was feeling constrained by the presence of the others, and their inclination was to release a trio of solo albums; cooler heads prevailed, however, and they reasoned that none of their solo works would sell remotely as well as an ELP album. The result was Works, a double album released in March of 1977. The album consisted of three solo sides and a fourth side on which the group did two extended collaborative efforts, "Pirates" and "Fanfare for the Common Man."

The record fared poorly, and the group was never the same: Works destroyed ELP's unity, and their main motivation for recording seemed only to be their contractual obligations. Worse still, they'd squandered valuable time with work on the double album, time during which the public's taste was changing -- the progressive bands were coming in for special criticism, and the notion of extended suites, conceptual rock albums, and classical-rock fusion now seemed hopelessly ponderous and pretentious as the rise of punk rock and disco seemed to undermine any notion of intellectualism in rock. Works, Vol. 2, released in November of 1977, was nothing more than a collection of obscure B-sides and odd tracks dating back four years, while their next album of new material, Love Beach, was later described by the bandmembers themselves as nothing more than a matter of going through the motions.

ELP split up in 1979: Lake embarked on a moderately successful solo career, Emerson took to composing film scores and recorded the occasional solo project, and after a stint with the band P.M., Palmer joined the pop supergroup Asia. In the mid-'80s, Emerson and Lake got together with drummer Cozy Powell as the short-lived Emerson, Lake & Powell, complete with a self-titled 1985 album. In 1991, Emerson, Lake & Palmer reunited for an album called Black Moon, followed by a fairly successful tour. In 1993, they released Live at Royal Albert Hall. Their attempt at another new album, In the Hot Seat, was doomed to failure by Emerson's development of a repetitive stress disorder in one hand, which required surgery and restricted the group's ability to record or perform. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Discography: Emerson, Lake & Palmer
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Music in Review

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In the Hot Seat

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Paper Sleeve Box

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Gold Collection

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Pomp & Ceremony: Live

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Greatest Hits Live

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Very Best of Emerson, Lake & Palmer

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Brain Salad Surgery [Shout! Factory Bonus Tracks]

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Lucky Man and Other Hits

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Original Bootleg Series From Manticore Vaults, Vol. 2

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Brain Salad Surgery [UK Bonus Tracks]

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Pictures at an Exhibition [Deluxe Edition]

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Brain Salad Surgery [Deluxe Edition]

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Live at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970

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Love Beach [Bonus Tracks]

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Black Moon [Bonus Track]

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Works, Vol. 1 [Bonus Track]

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Live at the Royal Albert Hall [DVD]

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Live at the Royal Albert Hall [DVD]

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Brain Salad Surgery

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Love Beach

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Love Beach

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Love Beach

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Love Beach

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Then & Now

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Then & Now

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Then & Now

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Pictures at an Exhibition [UK Bonus Track]

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Tarkus [Remastered]

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Tarkus [Remastered]

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Emerson, Lake & Palmer [Remastered]

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Live at Montreux, 1997

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Return of the Manticore

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Return of the Manticore

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Works, Vol. 2

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Works, Vol. 2

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Brain Salad Surgery [DVD Audio]

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Brain Salad Surgery [DVD Audio]

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I Believe in Father Christmas

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Show That Never Ends

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Works Live

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Works Live

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Fanfare: The Best of Live

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Live in Poland [Austria]

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Original Bootleg Series From Manticore Vaults, Vol. 3

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Spirit of ELP

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K2HD Best

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Works, Vol. 1

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Works, Vol. 1

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Works, Vol. 1

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Greatest Hits

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Black Moon

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Manticore Vaults, Vol. 1

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Tarkus

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Tarkus

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Pictures at an Exhibition [35th Anniversary Special Edition DVD]

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From the Front Row... Live!

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Original Bootleg Series from the Manticore Vaults, Vol. 4 [Box Set]

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Bootleg Box Set [Castle]

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Pictures at an Exhibition [Collector's Edition DVD]

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Brain Salad Surgery [Rhino Bonus Track]

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Best of Now Tour 1997-1998

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Ultimate Collection [UK Bonus CD]

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Trilogy

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Trilogy

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Live Broadcasts: Collector's Rarities [DVD]

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Essential Emerson, Lake & Palmer

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Introduction To...

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Live at the Royal Albert Hall

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Live [Castle]

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Reworks: Brain Salad Perjury

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Reworks: Brain Salad Perjury

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Trilogy [UK Bonus Track]

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Trilogy [UK Bonus Track]

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Fanfare: The 1997 World Tour

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Critical Review 1970-1992

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Critical Review 1970-1995 [DVD]

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Live [Disky]

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From the Beginning [CD/DVD]

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From the Beginning

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King Biscuit Flower Hour: Greatest Hits Live

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Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends

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Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends

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Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends

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Beyond the Beginning

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Beyond the Beginning

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Extended Versions

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Extended Versions

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Best of the Bootlegs

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Best of the Bootlegs

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Live in Poland

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Birth of a Band: Isle of Wight Festival

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Birth of a Band: Isle of Wight Festival

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Birth of a Band: Isle of Wight Festival [DVD]

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Classic Rock

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Come and See the Show: The Best of Emerson, Lake & Palmer

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Ultimate Collection

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Best of Emerson, Lake & Palmer [Rhino]

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Affairs of the Heart [Limited Edition]

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Best of Emerson, Lake & Palmer [Atlantic]

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In Concert

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Ladies & Gentlemen (Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends)

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Pictures at an Exhibition

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Pictures at an Exhibition

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Pictures at an Exhibition [Cotillion]

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Tarkus [13 Tracks]

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Emerson, Lake & Palmer

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Emerson, Lake & Palmer

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Wikipedia: Emerson, Lake & Palmer
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Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Toronto, February, 1978 Photo: Jean-Luc Ourlin
Toronto, February, 1978 Photo: Jean-Luc Ourlin
Background information
Origin England
Genre(s) Progressive rock
Years active 1970–1978, 1991–1998
Label(s) Manticore, Atlantic, Cotillion, Island, Sanctuary, Rhino, Shout! Factory
Associated acts King Crimson, The Nice, Atomic Rooster, Crazy World of Arthur Brown, Asia, 3, Emerson, Lake & Powell
Website EmersonLakePalmer.com

Emerson, Lake & Palmer (ELP) were an English progressive rock supergroup. In the 1970s, the band was extremely popular, selling over 35 million albums[1] and headlining huge concerts. The band consisted of Keith Emerson (keyboards), Greg Lake (guitar, bass guitar, vocals) and Carl Palmer (drums, percussion).

Contents

History

1970 to 1978

On two occasions in 1969, The Nice (with Keith Emerson on keyboards) and King Crimson (with Greg Lake on bass and vocals) shared the same venue, first on August 10, 1969 at the 9th Jazz and Blues Pop Festival in Plumpton, England and on October 17, 1969 at Fairfield Halls in Croydon, England.

After playing at a few of the same concerts, Emerson and Lake tried working together and found their styles to be not only compatible, but complementary. They wanted to be a keyboard/bass/drum band, and so searched out a drummer.

Before settling on Carl Palmer, who at that time was a member of Atomic Rooster, they approached Mitch Mitchell of The Jimi Hendrix Experience. Mitchell was uninterested but passed the idea to Jimi Hendrix. Hendrix, tired of his band and wanting to try something different, expressed an interest in playing with the group. Since Emerson and Lake had settled on Palmer by then, this led the British press to speculate about a supergroup called HELP, or "Hendrix, Emerson, Lake & Palmer".[2]. Because of scheduling conflicts, such plans were not immediately realised, but the initial three planned a jam session with Hendrix after their second concert at the Isle of Wight Festival (their debut being in The Guildhall, Plymouth on Sunday 23 August 1970 at 7.30pm - with the band "Earth" as support), with the possibility of him joining. Hendrix died shortly thereafter, and the three pressed on as Emerson, Lake and Palmer.

Greg Lake made this comment on ELP's discussions with Hendrix:

"Yeah, that story is indeed true, to some degree...Mitch Mitchell had told Jimi about us and he said he wanted to explore the idea. Even after Mitch was long out of the picture and we had already settled on Carl, talk about working with Jimi continued. We were supposed to get together and jam with him around August or September of 1970, but he died before we could put it together."

Their first four years were a creatively fertile period. Lake produced five of their first six albums (Brain Salad Surgery being co-produced with Pete Sinfield, who had recently abandoned King Crimson), starting with Emerson, Lake and Palmer (1970), which contained the hit "Lucky Man". Their best known early performance had been a relatively modest show at the August 1970 Isle of Wight Festival, one of the last of the great Woodstock-era festivals. At the end of their set, Emerson and Lake lit two cannons either side of the stage.

Tarkus (1971) was their first successful concept album, described as a story about "reverse evolution". The March 1971 live recording (Newcastle, UK) of the band's next album Pictures at an Exhibition, an interpretation of Modest Mussorgsky's work of the same name, was issued as a low-priced record, the success of which contributed to the band's overall popularity. The 1972 album Trilogy contained ELP's best-selling single, the understated "From the Beginning".

In 1973, the band had garnered enough recognition to form their own record label, Manticore Records, and purchased an abandoned cinema as their own rehearsal hall. In late 1973, Brain Salad Surgery, with an eye-catching sleeve designed by H. R. Giger, was released and became the band's best-known studio album. The lyrics were co-written by Peter Sinfield, who was the lyricist for King Crimson's first four albums. The subsequent world tours were documented with a massive three-LP live recording, Welcome Back my Friends to the Show that Never Ends.

Promotional photo from the middle of their first album

By April 1974, ELP were top of the bill during the California Jam Festival, pushing co-stars Deep Purple to second billing. ELP's California Jam performance was broadcast nationwide in the US and is often seen as the summit of the band's career.

The ELP sound was dominated by the Hammond organ and Moog synthesizer of the flamboyant Emerson. The band's compositions were heavily influenced by classical music in addition to jazz and – at least in their early years – hard rock. Many of their pieces are arrangements of, or contain quotations from, classical music, and they can be said to fit into the sub-genre of symphonic rock.

Onstage, the band exhibited an unorthodox mix of virtuoso musicianship and over-the-top theatrical bombast. Their extravagant and often aggressive live shows received much criticism in this regard – although in retrospect it was all rather small change compared to later rock spectacles: the theatrics were limited to a Persian carpet, a grand piano spinning end-over-end, a rotating percussion platform, and a Hammond organ being thrown around on stage to create feedback. Emerson often used a knife given to him by Lemmy (who had roadied for Emerson's previous band, The Nice) to force the keys on the organ to stay down.[3][citation needed] Another unusual factor was that Emerson took a full Moog modular synthesizer (an enormous, complex, and unpredictable instrument under the best of conditions) on the road with him, which added greatly to a tour's complexity.

ELP then took a three-year break to reinvent its music but lost contact with the changing musical scene. The band toured the US and Canada in 1977 and 1978 on a killing schedule of night after night performances – some with a full orchestra, which was a heavy burden on the tour revenues. These late-1970s tours found ELP working harder than ever to stay in touch with their audience. But as disco, punk rock, corporate rock and New Wave styles began to alter the musical landscape, ELP could no longer generate the excitement of being forerunners in musical innovation. Eventually, they drifted apart due to personality conflicts and irreconcilable differences concerning musical direction.

Their last studio album of the 1970s, Love Beach (1978), was dismissed even by the trio itself, who admitted it was delivered to fulfill a contractual obligation.[4] The Love Beach album has been ill-received not only by the music press but also by the fans, who easily understood that the group was tired, something Greg Lake admitted in various interviews. Side One features Lake and consists of several shorter songs in a late 70's attempt to put something in the pop charts. Side Two's composition, "Memoirs of an Officer and a Gentleman", is a four-part narration of the tale of a soldier in the Second World War, and his ordeal of love and death as well as tragedy and triumph. The album's cover engendered no small amount of ridicule, with Palmer complaining the group looked like the Bee Gees. This album, along with Yes' Tormato, Genesis', ...And Then There Were Three..., and The Moody Blues' Octave, are considered by critics to be an example of the shift of progressive rock to more commercial sound.

Later incarnations

In 1985, Emerson and Lake formed Emerson, Lake & Powell with heavy metal drummer Cozy Powell. Palmer declined to participate in a reunion, preferring to stay with Asia. Rumours also linked Bill Bruford to their new lineup, but the former Yes drummer remained committed to King Crimson and his own group, Earthworks. The album Emerson Lake & Powell charted reasonably well, with a major single, "Touch and Go" generating some radio and MTV exposure for the trio. However, the old interpersonal tensions between Lake and Emerson resurfaced during the 1986 tour. Emerson and Palmer subsequently joined with Robert Berry to form the unsuccessful band 3.

In 1991, Emerson, Lake & Palmer reformed and issued a 1992 comeback album, Black Moon, on JVC. Their 1992/1993 world tours were successful, culminating in a performance at the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles in early 1993 that has been heavily bootlegged. But, reportedly, Palmer suffered from carpal tunnel syndrome in one hand[citation needed] and Emerson has been treated for a repetitive stress disorder. In 1994, the band released a follow-up album, In the Hot Seat.

Emerson and Palmer recovered to tour again. The last ELP tours were in 1996, 1997, and 1998. Their tour schedules brought them to Japan, South America, Europe, the USA and Canada and ELP played fresh new versions of older work. However enjoyable these tours were, ELP played in significantly smaller venues for significantly smaller audiences (sometimes fewer than 500 people, as in Belo Horizonte, Brazil). Their last show was in San Diego, California, on August 31, 1998. Conflicts about a new album inspired a new and final break up. Greg Lake insisted on producing the next album, having produced all successful ELP albums in the early 1970s. Keith Emerson complained in public (on the internet) that although he and Carl Palmer worked out on a daily basis to maintain their musical skills, Greg Lake did not make the effort to do the same. Lake admitted that he did not train his voice: a few live shows were generally enough to get it in shape, he claimed.[citation needed]

In 2003, UK independent label Invisible Hands Music released a 3CD box set under the title Reworks: Brain Salad Perjury. This was a new work created by Keith Emerson in collaboration with British dance maverick Mike Bennett, using sampling technology and with an eye on club and ambient music styles. Emerson and Bennett sampled musical elements from the entire ELP oeuvre, creating entirely new music in an exotic, electronica style, opening with a dramatic reinterpretation of Fanfare For The Common Man. The musical complexity of the source material provided rich pickings for sampling and while not universally loved by ELP fans,[citation needed] the album found favour with critics and, impressively, the dance music community. Cuts from the album were widely played in clubs and, fleetingly at least, the band's music found a gigantic new audience who had never heard (or even heard of) Emerson Lake & Palmer.

Keith Emerson toured Britain with his old bandmates from The Nice during 2003, and played another tour with The Keith Emerson Band across North America and Europe. Drummer Carl Palmer tours on an irregular basis with his Carl Palmer Band, playing electric guitar adaptations of ELP's keyboard work on the club circuit. Greg Lake has toured the USA with Ringo Starr in 2001, and most recently has recorded with The Who. Lake has recently formed his own band featuring David Arch, Florian Opahle, Brett Morgan, Trevor Barry and Josh Grafton and toured the UK in Autumn 2005. The band was due to do a tour of the USA in September 2006 but was canceled because of management problems. In 2006, Carl Palmer rejoined the other three members of Asia for a 25th reunion world tour.

In March, 2009, Palmer said on his website there is "talk of an ELP reunion in the fall." Talking about Asia in Classic Rock Presents... Prog, he added: "We're even looking at an idea of mine called Asia: Family and Friends for next year." No further details were given.

Emerson, Lake, and Palmer made plans to tour at the end of the year, but unfortunately, due to Keith Emerson's hand injury, further tour plans have been cancelled, including Keith Emerson featuring Marc Bonilla's tour.

Discography

See also

References

  1. ^ Forrester, George; Askew, Frank; Hanson, Martyn (2005). Emerson, Lake and Palmer: The Show That Never Ends. Helter Skelter Publishing. ISBN 1900924714. 
  2. ^ ELP - Biography
  3. ^ While, a video of him playing Rondo in Belgium in 1971, shows Emerson using knives on his Hammond organ it does identify when he started doing so - [1] Viewed 27.12.2008; Evidence of this is also evident in a portion of a performance at the Royal Albert Hall, [2] Viewed 27.12.2008.
  4. ^ Emerson Lake & Palmer. (2008). Beyond The Beginning. [DVD]. http://www.emersonlakepalmer.com/beyondbegin_press.htm. 

Further reading

  • Edward Macan. Endless Enigma, A Musical Biography of Emerson, Lake and Palmer. 2006, Open Court Publishing Company, ISBN 0-8126-9596-8.
  • Forrester, George, Martyn Hanson and Frank Askew. Emerson, Lake & Palmer, The Show That Never Ends, A Musical Biography. (2001) Helter Skelter Publishing ISBN 1-900924-17-X.
  • The New Musical Express Book of Rock, 1975, Star Books, ISBN 0 352 300744

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